[0001] This invention relates to inorganic oxide fibres and their production and particularly
to a new type or form of inorganic oxide fibre and a process for the production of
the new fibre type or form.
[0002] It is well known to produce inorganic oxide fibres by fibrizing a spinning composition
comprising a solution of a soluble metal compound which decomposes on heating to yield
a metal oxide. For example alumina fibres can be made by fibrizing an aqueous solution
of aluminium chlorohydrate and subsequently decomposing the aluminium compound to
yield alumina fibres. The spinning composition may contain a spinning aid such as
an organic polymer to confer upon it the correct rheology characteristics for spinning
and additives such as phase-change inhibitors, e.g. silica, or metal oxide particles
may be dissolved or suspended in the composition.
[0003] The production of fibres from the spinning composition may be effected by a variety
of techniques, depending to some extent upon the form of the resulting fibres. The
commonest form of inorganic oxide fibres, notably alumina fibre, is relatively short
(e.g. 2 to 5 cm) staple fibre in the form of a mat or blanket obtained by partially
drying the freshly-spun gel fibres in flight, collecting the partially dry fibres
at the base of the spinning apparatus on a wire or belt and subsequently heating the
fibres to dry them and convert the inorganic oxide precursor into the inorganic oxide.
In this product form the fibres are randomly oriented in the length and breadth direction
of the mat or blanket and are of relatively fine diameter, for example from 1 to 10
microns, a typical average fibre diameter being about 3 microns.
[0004] The above product can be produced by a blow-spinning technique or a centrifugal spinning
technique. In the former the spinning composition is extruded through orifices into
one or more fast-moving air streams which attenuate and draw-down the resulting gel
fibres and carry them through a drying zone in which they are at least partially dried
in flight. In the centrifugal spinning technique the spinning composition is fed into
a rotating atomizer, e.g. an inverted bowl or disc, from which the composition is
flung off in the form of gel fibres which are at least partially dried in flight during
passage through a drying zone.
[0005] Processes of the general types described above for the production of mats or blankets
of randomly oriented inorganic oxide fibres are described, for example, in our United
Kingdom Patent Specification No. 1,360,197 (blow spinning) and Patent Publication
No. 2,096,586A (centrifugal spinning).
[0006] Inorganic oxide fibres in the form of continuous filaments have also been proposed,
such fibres being obtainable for example by extruding the spinning solution continuously
through an orifice and winding up the continuous fibres on e.g. a drum. The gel fibres
are dried between the spinning orifice and the wind up means to an extent that they
do not stick together on the wind-up apparatus. Such a process is proposed, for example,
in Patent Specification No. 1,360,
197. Although it has been proposed to produce continuous inorganic oxide fibres by
a centrifugal spinning technique, this is difficult to acheive in practice and continuous
fibres are not generally produced by a centrifugal technique.
[0007] Continuous inorganic oxide fibres as produced hitherto are of relatively large diameter
compared with the fine (e.g. 3 micron) fibres known in the randomly oriented mats
or blankets described hereinbefore. Normally, continuous inorganic oxide fibres have
a diameter greater than 8 and usually not less than 10 microns, it being commonly
believed in the art that fibres of diameter below 8 to 10 microns are too weak in
the gel state to be produced satisfactorily in continuous form. This is especially
true in respect of fibres produced from spinning compositions which are solutions
of oxide precursors or sols or dispersions of oxide particles of size below about
10 microns. Thus although it is proposed in BP 1,360,297 to make fine-diameter (e.g.
3 micron) continuous fibres by blow-spinning of a spinning solution, such fibres are
in practice a mere laboratory curiosity and are unknown in the market place.
[0008] Since their introduction to industry some 15 years ago, fine-diameter inorganic oxide
fibres in the form of a randomly-oriented mat or blanket have attracted considerable
attention and numerous attempts have been made to produce the fibres in a highly-
oriented, aligned-fibre form. However since the fibres are not succeptible to processes
such as carding these attempts have failed and hitherto fine-diameter (3 micron) inorganic
oxide (alumina) fibres in the form of aligned fibres have been unknown in practice.
[0009] Aligned-fibre product forms of inorganic oxide (alumina) fibres are known made from
the continuous- filament fibres described hereinbefore. For example continuous fibres
and aligned-fibre products made from them are described in BP 1,264,973 and BP 1,457,801.
The fibres described in BP 1,264,973 are made from suspensions (soks.) of inorganic
oxide particles and are of relatively large diameter, for example greater than 10
microns. The fibres described in BP 1,457,801 are made from an organo-aluminium polymer
and are of diameter greater than 8 microns. The references do not envisage aligned
continuous fibre products made of fine-diameter fibres and indeed teach that such
fibres and products are in effect unobtainable in view of the inherent weakness of
fine-diameter fibres in the gel state.
[0010] In recent years considerable interest has been generated in the incorporation of
inorganic oxide, e.g. alumina, fibres in metals and alloys to produce metal matrix
composites of improved wear-resistance and/or high temperature performance compared
with the metals or alloys alone. Notable in this respect is the development of components
for the motor industry, especially pistons or parts of pistons and connecting rods.
This use of the fibres has highlighted the desirability of aligned-fibre product forms
of the fibres, for example to confer one-directional strength on a component i.e.
much greater strength in one direction than in the transverse direction.
[0011] Also, incorporation of the fibres in metal matrix composites involves packing the
fibres together to obtain high volume fractions of the fibres in the composites. Inorganic
oxide fibres are hard and quite brittle and compression of a randomly-oriented mat
or blanket of the fibres results in extensive breakage of the fibres. Orientation
or alignment of the fibres results in less breakage of the fibres when compression
is applied to obtain high volume fractions of fibres.
[0012] There is a need for a product form of fine-diameter inorganic oxide fibres which
is compressible without breaking the fibres and it is with such a product form that
the present invention is concerned.
[0013] According to the invention there is provided a fibre product comprising inorganic
oxide fibres of mean diameter less than 10 microns which can be compressed to increase
the volume fraction of fibres therein to greater than 0.25 (25%) without undue breakage
of the fibres and in particular with only a very low degree of fibre breakage compared
with the breakage resulting from compression to the same volume fraction of fibres
of a product made of randomly oriented fibres of the same diameter. In a preferred
embodiment of the invention the product is compressible to increase the volume fraction
of fibres therein to about 0.5 (50%) or greater without significant breakage (i.e.
reduction in length) of the fibres. The pressure applied to compress the fibres may
be more than 5 MPa without causing extensive breakage of the fibres.
[0014] Breakage of fibres during compression of the product results in a decrease in the
tensile strength of the product in the general direction of alignment of the fibres.
Excessive breakage of fibres is denoted by an abrupt fall, i.e. a fall to below 50%,
in the specific tensile strength (= breaking force/mass of sample) of the product.
By compression "without significant breakage" of the fibres we mean compression without
causing a fall to below 50% in the specific tensile strength of the product.
[0015] The degree of compression at which significant breakage of the fibres occurs, as
represented by an abrupt fall in specific tensile strength of the product, is roughly
determined by compressing strips of the product (each strip of the same length and
approximately the same breadth and weight) to different volume fractions of fibres,
determining the specific tensile strength of each compressed strip and noting the
degrees of compression between which an abrupt fall is observed in the specific strength
of the compressed samples. By way of illustration strips of an essentially aligned-fibre
product according to the invention wherein the volume fraction of fibres was 0.1 (10%)
and of size 50 mm x 3 mm (with the length direction in the general direction of alignment
of the fibres) were compressed to thicknesses corresponding to volume fractions of
fibres of 0.2 (20), 0.3 (30), 0.35 (35), 0.4 (40) and 0.45 (45%) in a 50 mm x 3 mm
channel with matching plunger. The tensile strength of each compressed strip was determined
and the specific tensile strength of the compressed strip was calculated. In this
experiment the specific tensile strength of the strips was found to be + 20% the same
for the strips compressed to volume fractions of 0.2 (20), 0.3 (30) and 0.35 (35%)
whilst the specific tensile strength of the strip compressed to 0.4 (40%) volume fraction
had fallen to only about 5% of the strength of the first three compressed strips.
The degree of compression at which the fibres suffered significant breakage accordingly
was compression to between 0.35 (35) and 0.4 (40%) volume fraction of fibres.
[0016] As a rough guide to the compressibility of the fibre product, the abrupt fall in
the specific tensile strength of the product indicating excessive breakage of the
fibres can be detected by pulling the product sample between the fingers; the undamaged
product resists pulling apart whilst a damaged product pulls apart easily. Using this
simple test an experienced operator can determine reasonably accurately the point
at which excessive damage of the fibres occurs.
[0017] The fibrous product comprises inorganic oxide fibres and it is to be understood that
the volume fraction of fibres at which excessive damage of the fibres occurs on compressing
the product is to be determined on the product comprising inorganic oxide fibres rather
than a product comprising inorganic oxide precursor fibres. Inorganic oxide fibres
are usually made from precursor materials which are formed into gel fibres which are
then heated to convert the precursor materials into the desired inorganic oxides and
convert the gel fibres into inorganic oxide fibres. The gel fibres often contain organic
materials such as polymeric spinning aids and these are removed during heating of
the gel fibres to form the inorganic oxide fibres.
[0018] Although, as stated, the compressibility test must be made on the product comprising
inorganic oxide fibres, a guide as to the compressibility of such a product is given
by the behaviour on compression of the product comprising gel fibres. Gel fibres are
less rigid than the final inorganic oxide fibres and are able to creep so that they
are less liable to breakage on compression than are the final inorganic oxide fibres.
Nevertheless the volume fraction of gel fibres in a product compressed to say 40 KPa
is a good indicator of the resistance to compressive damage of the inorganic oxide
fibres in the final product; in .general the higher the volume fraction of gel fibres
in the compressed product the greater will be the resistance to compressive damage
of the fibres in the final product and the higher will be the volume fraction of fibres
at which excessive damage is caused to the fibres in the final product. By way of
example we have found that a product comprising alumina precursor gel fibres and compressible
to 33% volume fraction fibres at 40 KPa yielded a final product comprising alumina
fibres which was compressible to 29% volume fraction fibres without excessive breakage
of the alumina fibres, whilst a gel fibre product compressed to 40% volume fraction
yielded a final product which was compressible to over 45% volume fraction fibres
without excessive breakage of the alumina fibres. It is to be understood, however,
that the compression behaviour of a product comprising gel fibres is only a guide
as to the compression behaviour of the product so that the test of the compression
behaviour of the product comprising gel fibres is not a substitute for the test on
the final product; in general however a final product will compress to greater than
25% volume fraction fibres without excessive damage to the fibres if the precursor
product comprising gel fibres yields a volume fraction of fibres greater than 30%
on compression at 40 KPa.
[0019] Preferably the product of the invention is an essentially-aligned fibre product comprising
inorganic oxide fibres of average diameter not greater than 10 microns and preferably
not greater than 5 microns.
[0020] By the term "essentially-aligned-fibre product" as used throughout this specification
is meant a product form in which the fibres extend in the same general direction but
may not be truly parallel over their entire length so that a degree of overlap of
fibres is possible and any particular fibre may extend over part of or even its entire
length at an angle, e.g. up to 30°, or even higher with respect to the general direction
of alignment of the fibres. In such a product the overall impression is of fibres
which are parallel but in fact a slight degree of overlap and intertwining of fibres
is desirable in order to confer lateral stability to the product to enable it to be
handled without undue separation of the fibres. We prefer that at least 90% of the
fibres be essentially parallel.
[0021] In an especially preferred embodiment of the product the inorganic oxide fibres are
"nominally continuous" by which term is meant that the individual fibres may not be
truly continuous in the sense of having infinite length or of extending the entire
length of the product but each fibre has appreciable length, e.g. at least 0.5 metre
and usually several metres, such that the overall impression in the product is of
continuous fibres. Thus free ends of fibres may appear in the product, representing
an interruption in fibre continuity, but in general the number of free ends in any
square cm of the product will be relatively low and the proportion of interrupted
fibres in a square cm will be no greater than about 1 in 100.
[0022] A typical product according to the invention comprising nominally-continuous fibres
is a mat or blanket of thickness a few mms. In a product of this
'thickness the number of free ends of fibre in a square cm of the product may be up
to about 2500; this compares with about 50,000 free ends in a product of similar mass
made of short (up to 5 cms) staple fibres of the same diameter. The product made of
nominally continuous fibres is thus very different in appearance and properties from
a-product made of short, staple fibres.
[0023] The essentially-aligned and nominally-continuous structure of the preferred products
of the invention is demonstrated by the high Specular Reflectance of such products.
We have observed that the greater the degree of alignment of the fibres, especially
nominally-continuous fibres, in the product, then the greater is the Specular Reflectance
of the product. The products exhibit a Specular Reflectance in the general direction
of alignment of the fibres of greater than 10 unite, preferably greater than 20 units.
[0024] By "Specular Reflectance" is meant the light reflected from the surface of the product
in the test described in BS 3900: Part D2: 1967.
[0025] In carrying out the test described in BS 3900: Part 2: 1967 we prefer to utilize
light impinging at an angle of 60° to the normal from the surface, which 60° is the
angle recommended in the BS.test for general purpose measurements on paints. In general,
the light reflected from the surface of the fibrous products of the invention is less
than the light reflected from the surface of a paint so that gloss readings of below
50 units are typical; we therefor depart from BS 3900: Part D2: 1967 in accepting
readings below 50 units.
[0026] It is to be understood that the Specular Reflectance in the general direction of
alignment of the fibres is usually greater than the Specular Reflectance in a direction
perpendicular to the general direction of alignment of the fibres and the values quoted
herein are in respect of Specular Reflectance in the general direction of alignment
of the fibres. By way of illustration typical alumina precursor fibre products according
to the invention exhibited a Specular Reflectance of up to 30-40 units in the general
direction of alignment of the fibres and of 2-15 units in the direction perpendicular
to the general direction of alignment of the fibres. By way of comparison a mat of
randomly-oriented short (below 5 cm) alumina precursor fibres of the same diameter
exhibited a Specular Reflectance of only 2-6 units in all directions. The specular
reflectance figures quoted above were determined on gel fibre products prior to heat-treatment
of the products.
[0027] Specular Reflectance, which is a measure of the proportion of incident light reflected
by the surface of the product, is a readily determinable property of the product.
It has the advantage by comparison with certain other properties of the product that
not only is it readily determinable but also that it is exhibited by the gel fibres
(i.e. fibres which have been dried but not heated to the temperature required to convert
the alumina precursor to alumina) as well as by the final heat-treated fibres. Thus
it is possible to determine whether the fibres are sufficiently aligned to yield a
satisfactory product without the necessity of subjecting the product to a heat treatment
programme.
[0028] As is described hereinbefore, a small degree of non-alignment of the fibres in the
product has the advantage of conferring lateral stability on the product to enable
it to be handled satisfactorily. The preferred product comprising essentially-aligned
and nominally-continuous fibres possesses a degree of lateral cohesion such that significant
separation of the fibres is resisted under normal product handling conditions.
[0029] Preferably the lateral cohesion in the product, resulting from fibres disposed at
an angle to the general direction of alignment of the fibres, is such that the product
exhibits a tensile strength of at least 25,000 Pa in a direction perpendicular to
the general direction of alignment of the fibres. The lateral strength of the product
will depend to some extent upon the diameter of the fibres since given the same degree
of entanglement, fatter fibres will produce a greater lateral strength than will thinner
fibres; in fact fatter fibres tend to be less entangled than thinner fibres so that
in practice fatter fibres result in lower lateral strengths in the product.
[0030] The fibres in the product of the invention are polycrystalline metal oxide fibres,
for example alumina and zinconia fibres, and preferably are alumina fibres. In this
case the alumina fibres may comprise alpha-alumina or a transition phase of alumina,
notably gamma- or delta-alumina. Typically the fibres will comprise wholly a transition
alumina or a minor proportion of alpha-alumina embedded in a matrix of a transition
alumina such as gamma- or delta-alumina. We prefer fibres comprising zero or a low
alpha-alumina content and in particular an alpha-alumina content of below 20 and especially
below 10% by weight. In general the greater the alpha-alumina content of the fibres,
the lower is its tensile strength and the lower is its flexibility. The preferred
fibres of the invention exhibit acceptable tensile strengths and have a high flexibility.
In a particular embodiment of the invention, the fibres have a tensile strength greater
than 1750 MPa and a modulus greater than 200 GPa.
[0031] The density of the fibres is largely dependent upon the heat treatment to which the
fibres have been subjected and the presence or absence of a phase-stabiliser in the
fibres. After spinning and at least partial drying, the gel fibres are usually heated
in steam at a temperature of from 200°C to about 600°C to decompose the metal oxide
precursor and then are further heated to burn out any organic residues and to sinter
the resulting metal oxide fibres. Sintering temperatures of 1000°C or higher may be
employed. After the steam treatment the fibres are highly porous and high porosity
is retained during sintering up to, for example, 900-950°C. However, after sintering
silica- containing alumina fibres at for example above 1100°C, e.g. up to 1350°C or
higher, the fibres have little porosity. Thus by controlling the sintering temperature
and amount of phase-stabiliser present, low density fibres of high porosity or high
density fibres of low porosity may be obtained. Typical apparent densities for low
density and high density alumina fibres are 1.75 g/ml and 3.3 g/ml; fibres of any
desired density within this range can be obtained by careful control of the heat treatment
to which the fibres are subjected. Typical apparent low and high densities of zirconia
fibres are 4.0 and 5.6.
[0032] We have observed that the modulus of the fibres does not appear to be greatly affected
by sintering the fibres at above 1000°C and does not vary greatly in accordance with
the apparent density of the fibres. For instance, over the range of apparent fibre
densities of 2 g/ml to 3.,3 g/ml, the modulus of alumina fibres has been observed
to change only from about 170-230 GPa to about 240-300 Gpa. Thus the ratio of fibre
modulus to fibre density (= specific modulus) is generally greatest in respect of
low density fibres.
[0033] The aligned-fibre products can be produced by a blow-spinning technique or a centrifugal
spinning technique, in both cases a spinning formulation being formed into a multiplicity
of fibre precursor streams which are dried at least partially in flight to yield gel
fibres which are then collected on a suitable device such as a wind-up drum rotating
at high speed. We prefer to use a blow-spinning technique in which the spinning formulation
is extruded into a multiplicity of fibre precursor streams, which are entrained in
air streams and passed through a converging duct to a wind-up drum. Preferably the
spinning formulation is extruded into converging streams of air of relative humidity
greater than 70%. The speed of rotation of the wind-up drum will depend upon the diameter
of the drum and is matched to the speed of spinning of the fibres so that undue tension
is not applied to the weak gel fibres. As a guide only, a wind-up drum speed of 1500
rpm is fairly typical for a drum of diameter 15 cms. In practice it may be desirable
to wind the wind-up drum slightly faster than the speed of extrusion of the fibres
so that the fibres are subjected to slight tension which serves to draw down the fibres
to the desired diameter and to keep the fibres straight. Of course, the applied tension
should not be sufficient to break the majority of the fibres.
[0034] As stated hereinbefore, the fibres may not be truly continuous and generally are
of length a few metres. The minimum fibre length in the case of collection on a wind-up
drum is approximately equal to the circumference of the wind-up drum since fibres
which are shorter than this tend to be flung off the rotating drum. Because the fibres
are not of infinite length it is important that a multiplicity of fibres be spun simultaneously
so that the resulting collection of fibres pass through the apparatus in a bundle
or sheet whereby free ends of fibres are carried along by the bundle or sheet of fibres
which gives an overall impression of fibre-continuity.
[0035] The spinning formulation may be any of those known in the art for producing polycrystalline
metal oxide fibres and preferably is a spinning solution free or essentially free
from suspended solid particles of size greater than 10 and preferably greater than
5 microns. The rheology characteristics of the spinning formulation can be readily
adjusted to result in long fibres rather than short fibres, for example by use of
spinning aids such as organic polymers or by varying the concentration of fibre-forming
components in the formulation.
[0036] The fibre product of the invention can be a sheet or mat (as described hereinbefore)
comprising essentially-aligned and nominally-continuous fibres exhibiting lateral
cohesion as a result of entanglement of some of the fibres. A typical product of this
type is a sheet or mat of thickness a few, say 2-5 nuns, width several cms and length
a metre or more, obtained by collecting the fibres on a wind-up drum and cutting the
collected fibres parallel to the axis of the wind-up drum (the length and width of
the sheet or mat thus being determined by the dimensions of the wind-up drum). Other
product forms such as yarns, rovings, tapes and ribbons can be obtained either from
the product collected on a wind-up drum or directly by using a suitable fibre-collection
technique. In the case of a product collected on a wind-up drum, the product can be
cut in the general direction of alignment of the fibres to provide tapes or ribbons
which can be drawn off from the drum and converted if desired into yarns or rovings.
[0037] The fibre product in the form of yarns, rovings, tapes or ribbons can be converted
into woven products using suitable weaving techniques. Woven product forms of the
fibres may be an especially useful form of the fibres for incorporation as the reinforcement
for metals in metal matrix composites and products in the form of woven material are
provided according to a feature of the invention.
[0038] The fibre products may be used in any of the applications in which alumina fibres
are commonly employed, for example as thermal and accoustic insulating materials and
as the reinforcement for metal matrix composites.
[0039] The invention is illustrated by the following Examples in which values quoted of
density and porosity of fibres were determined as follows:-Fibre Porosity - As has
been described gel fibres after decomposition develop internal pores. The total amount
of porosity depends both on the raw materials used and the method of decomposition
and sintering. Provided the mean pore diameter is less than 8 nm, the water sorption
capacity is a convenient measure of total pore volume.

[0040] To determine the water sorption capacity a sample of fibre, dried at 150°C/2 hrs
to constant weight, is put into a desiccator over saturated KC1 (which gives a constant
vapour pressure equivalent to 86% relative humidity) for 3 days (or until a constant
weight is reached). It is reweighed and the increase in weight gives the volume of
pores. If the water- saturated sample is now put into a Helium pycnometer (e.g. Quantachrome
stereopycnometer) its total volume may be determined. By total volume we mean the
volume of alumina in the fibres plus any internal pores. The apparent density is then
given by

[0041] The fibre true density is obtained by measuring the volume of a known weight of Alumina
fibres when dry with a Helium pycnometer since the gas completely penetrates the internal
pores. Using a Quantachrome stereopycnometer a minimum weight of 2 g fibre should
be used.
[0042] Alumina fibres of all compositions finished at 950°C or below will possess pores
within the above size limits. In some cases alumina fibres treated at temperatures
up to 1100°C can still be within the above limit.
[0043] However, depending on the precise composition and finishing temperature of some alumina
fibre samples, it will not be possible to fill all internal pores with water as described
above. Zirconia fibres have pores up to 30 nm in diameter and all the internal pores
in zirconia fibres cannot be filled with water. In such cases the porosity obtained
by the water sorption method is an underestimate of the true value and the apparent
density will be an overrestimate of the true value. For samples finished above 950°
therefore the pore diameter must be checked by examining the N
2 isotherm hysteresis loop. If a clear single maximum is observed for both adsorption
and desorption branches, the total volume adsorbed is a measure of the total pore
volume.
[0045] 
[0046] When a clear single maximum cannot be observed then the true total pore volume will
exceed that calculated from the above expression when the volume N
2 adsorbed is put equal to the value observed where the desorption branch first deviates
from the adsorption branch.
Example 1
Preparation of a gel spinning solution
[0047] 0.1 gm of thiourea was dissolved in 600 gms of commercial aluminium chlorhydrate
solution (Locron L available from Hoechst AG). The solution was stirred with a propeller
stirrer and 6.5 gms of polyethylene oxide (Union Carbide Polyox WSR-N-750) were added;
the polymer dissolved over a period of 2 hours. At this stage the solution viscosity
was approximately 1 poise. 160 gms of aluminium chlorhydrate powder (Hoechst Locron
P) were then added to the solution; the powder dissolved after a further 2 hours stirring.
35 gms of a siloxane surfactant, Dow DC 193, were then added. The solution was filtered
through a glass fibre filter (Whatman GF/B) rated nominally between 1 and
[0049] The solution viscosity, measured on a low shear Ubbelhode capillary viscometer was
18 poise.
Formation of Fibres
[0050] The solution was extruded through a row of holes on either side of which were slits
through which air was directed to converge on the emerging extrudate. The air flowed
at 60 m/sec and was humidified to 85% relative humidity at 25°C. Further streams of
heated dry air at 60°C flowed outside the humidified air streams. Long, (nominally
continuous) gel fibres were formed and these were fed with the co-flowing air streams
into a converging duct at the base of which the mixture impinged at a gas velocity
of 14 m/sec on a rotor coated with fine Carborundum paper and rotating at 12 m/sec
peripheral velocity. A blanket of essentially aligned fibres accumulated on the rotor.
[0051] After 30 minutes, the rotor was withdrawn from the base of the converging duct, stopped
and the aligned-fibre blanket was cut parallel to the axis of the rotor and removed
from the rotor. At this stage the gel fibres contained 43% by weight of refractory
material with silica constituting 4.1% by weight of the refractory material. The median
gel fibre diameter was 5 microns.
Fibre Blanket Properties
[0052] A sample of the fibre blanket was compressed in a Shirley Thickness gauge and the
observed compression characteristics are shown as curve A in Figure 1. For purposes
of comparison, the compression procedure was carried out on a blanket made of gel
fibres of thickness about 10 mms and mean fibre diameter 5 microns in which the fibres
were randomly distributed. The characteristics of the comparison blanket are also
shown in Figure 1 ("RANDOM").
[0053] The mean Specular Reflection (BS 3900: Part D2: 1976) of the sample was 27.3 units
along the direction of general alignment of the fibres and 8.8 units perpendicular
to the general direction of alignment. For purposes of comparison, the Specular Reflectance
was determined for a blanket made of short, randomly-oriented fibres as described
above; values of 3.9 units and 4.1 units were noted in respectively the length and
breadth directions of the blanket.
[0054] The "as spun", gel fibre blanket was dried for 30 minutes in an oven at 150°C and
then was immediately transferred to a second oven purged with steam at 300°C and 1
atmosphere pressure. The purge steam temperature was raised to 600°C over a period
of 45 minutes, whereupon the oven was purged with air and the temperature was then
increased gradually to 900°C over a period of 45 minutes. At this stage, the fibres
were white and porous. The main crystalline phase was eta-alumina, the porosity 40%
by volume and the surface area 140m
2/g. The median diameter of the fibres was 3.6 microns. A sample of the fibres (25
fibres) was tested with a Marsh micro-tensile testing machine in which strength and
modulus of individual fibres (of length 1 mm) were measured. Graphs were plotted from
the results and correlations of fibre strength and modulus as a function of fibre
diameter were determined. Table 1 shows the correlated values of tensile strength
and tensile modulus as a function of fibre diameter.

Example 2
[0055] The final product from Example 1 was heated in air for 15 minutes at 1300°C. A refractory
fibre of median diameter 3 microns was obtained. The principle alumina phase in the
fibre was delta-alumina in the form of small crystallites together with 3% by weight
of alpha-alumina. The fibre porosity was 10%.
[0056] Samples of a fibre tow pulled from the blanket were compressed in a modified Instron
tensile testing machine. The compression characteristics are shown as curve A in Figure
2. For purposes.of comparison, a blanket made of randomly-oriented short fibres as
described in Example 1 was fired and compressed in the same manner; the comparison
characteristics are also shown in Fig. 2 ("RANDOM"). The sample of fibre tow which
had been compressed as above was tested under tension. The sample compressed to 42.5%
by volume of fibre remained strong, that compressed to 52% by volume of fibre was
weak; implying a limiting packing volume for the fibres in the tow of between these
limits. For purposes of comparison, a similar test on the compressed blanket made
from randomly-oriented, short-fibres indicated extensive damage to the fibres upon
compression to about 12.5% by volume of the fibres.
[0057] A sample of fibre blanket 2 cms long by 1 cm deep width was held between the jaws
of an Instron machine with the jaws 2 mm apart and pulled normal to the general direction
of fibre alignment. The tensile strength in this direction was 42500 N/m
2.
[0058] Measurements of tensile modulus and tensile strength were made on 50 fibres and correlated
value of modulus and strength as a function of diameter were determined; these are
shown in Table 2.

Example 3
[0059] A spinning solution was prepared and fibres were spun according to the method described
in Example 1. The fibres were collected on a rotor rotating at 9 m/sec peripheral
speed, and an essentially-aligned fibre blanket was obtained. The median gel fibre
diameter was 5 microns and 87% of the fibres were essentially parallel (within + 10°).
[0060] The gel fibre blanket was compressed in a Shirley Thickness gauge and compression
characteristics are shown as curve B in Figure 1.
[0061] The mean Specular Reflection of the sample was 20.5 units along the general direction
of alignment of the fibres and 10.9 units normal to that direction.
[0062] The fibre was fired according to the procedure described in Example 2 (1300°C), and
compression characteristics of fibre tows were again determined; these are shown as
curve B in Figure 2.
[0063] The compressed fibre tows were tested in tension as in Example 2 and an abrupt fall
in strength was observed with the sample compressed to 29.4% by volume of fibres.
The 26% by volume sample was undamaged.
Example 4
[0064] A spinning solution was prepared from the following ingredients:-

[0065] The thiourea was dissolved in the aluminium chlorhydrate solution and the Polyox
was added and dissolved over 3 hours, stirring with a propeller stirrer. Flake was
added over 15 minutes and stirring continued for a further 3 hours. The solution was
strained through Gelman polypropylene filter pads (Gelman Sciences Part No 61790),
then filtered through a Whatman GF/B glass fibre filter. The solution viscosity, measured
with an Ubbelhode viscometer at 25°C was 16 poise.
[0066] The solution was extruded through a row of holes at a rate of 3.2 ml/hole per hr.
Jets of humid air at 25°C and 88% relative humidity impinged on the extrudate which
was attenuated into fibres. Dry air at 68 to 70°C flowed outside the humid air streams
and the mixture of air and fibres flowed into a converging duct, whence they were
discharged on to a wind-up drum coated with fine emergy paper rotating at 10 m/sec.
Air left the duct at 16 m/sec. Long, essentially continuous fibre precursors (gel
fibres), of mean diameter 13 microns, containing 4.5% silica on refractories were
produced.
[0067] 10 g of gel fibre were heated in steam (100 min. 340°C rising to 520°C) and then
in air (1 hr; 800-900°C temperature).
[0068] The apparent density of the fibres was determined to be 1.93 g/ml and 20 fibres were
tested using a Marsh microtensile machine. Their mean diameter was 9.50+1.50 micron,
Youngs Modulus was found to be 53+27 GPa, and their tensile strength 452+203 MPa.
After compression of the product at 500 kPa using a Shirley thickness gauge the volume
fraction of fibres was 42% and on release of pressure the sample was undamaged. 1
g of the 900°C-fired fibre was heated to 1300°C for 30 minutes when its apparent density
was 3.4 g/ml. 20 fibres were tested and found to be 9.14+0.90 micron diameter, with
Youngs Modulus 120+21 GPa and Tensile Strength 449+149 MPa. A sample was compressed
to a volume fraction of 30.6% at 500 kPa and was found to be undamaged on release
of the pressure.
Example 5
[0069] A gel fibre was prepared as in Example 4.
[0070] 5.3 g of gel fibres were heated in a tube furnace to 150°C during 40 mins in an air
stream after which the air stream was replaced by steam. Over 2.5 hours the temperature
was raised to 600°C and then maintained at 600°C for 1.5 hours. The steam was replaced
by air and the temperature raised to 940°C over 1 hour 40 mins. The fibres had an
apparent density of 1.76 g/ml and 20 fibres were tested to determine Young's Modulus
(45.3+4.3 GPa), tensile strength (377+100 MPa) and diameter (7.48+0.64 um). On compression
to 100 kPa the fibre volume fraction was 32.3% and on release of pressure the fibres
were undamaged.
Example 6
[0071] 0.1 gm of thiourea was dissolved in 600 gm of commercial aluminium chlorhydrate solution
(Locron L. available from Hoechst AG); 16.5 gm of polyethylene glycol (PEG 10000)
were then stirred in to maintain clarity later in the batch, followed by 21.8 gm of
magnesium chloride hexahydrate. After 5 minutes the solution was stirred at 1500 rpm
with a Greaves type B mixer and 5.8 gm of polyethylene oxide (Polyox-WSR-205) were
added. Mixing was continued with a propeller and after a further 30 minutes 150 gm
of aluminium chlorhydrate flake (Hoechst Locron P) was added gradually. The flake
was dissolved after 3 hours at which stage the solution viscosity, measured with an
Ubbelhode suspended level viscometer, was 32.5 poise. 5 ml of water were blended in
to reduce the viscosity to 22.1 poise at which the solution is more stable.
[0072] The solution was then extruded at a rate of 1.6 ml per hour per hole and spun according
to the method described in Example 1, with humid air of 88% relative humidity at 25°C,
and dry air at 65°C. The fibres were collected on a drum surface rotating at 10 m/sec
with the co-flowing air stream discharging from the duct at 14 m/sec.
[0073] The product was an aligned fibre blanket of gel precursor fibres containing 2% magnesia
on refractories and of mean diameter 4.5 microns. The fibres could be compressed to
a volume fraction of 28% by application of 40 kPa pressure.
[0074] In a further run the spinning rate was raised to 3 ml/hr per hole, other conditions
being maintained. The gel fibre produced was of mean diameter 8.8 microns with a spread
of diameters of from 7 to 12 microns.
[0075] 6.1 g of the gel fibre (mean diameter 8.8+0.9 micron) was heated in a tube furnace
to 150°C with air flowing over the sample. At 150°C steam was introduced in place
of the air and the temperature raised from 200 to 710°C over 2.75 hrs. The steam purge
was then replaced by air and the temperature raised to 900°C over 50 mins. The sample
was then removed from the furnace. Its apparent density was 2.03 g/ml, porosity 36.4%,
surface area 144 m
2/g and mean fibre diameter was 5.46+0.86 um. Using a Shirley thickness gauge it was
compressed to a volume fraction of 35.4% at 100 kPa and was found to be undamaged
after the pressure was released.
Example 7
[0076] A spinning solution was prepared following the general procedure of Example 6. Thiourea
(0.1 gm) was blended with 600 gm of aluminium chlorhydrate solution and followed by
22.1 gm of polyethylene glycol (PEG-10000).
[0077] The solution was then stirred with a Greaves B laboratory mixer operating at 2000
rpm and an alumina stabilised silica sol (Wesol P) was added slowly to the batch,
42 gm being added over 5 minutes.
[0078] 5.8 gm of polyethylene oxide (Polyox WSR-205) were added quickly and after 7 minutes
the Greaves mixer was replaced by a propeller stirrer and 170 gm of aluminium chlorhydrate
flake was added over 30 minutes. The dissolution of the flake continued for 3 hours
after which the solution was filtered, with difficulty, through GF/B filters under
50 psig pressure. The solution viscosity was 8.2 poise.
[0079] The solution was spun following the procedure and rates of Example 6, with the wind-up
drum speed increased to 12 m/sec. The gel precursor fibres contained 4.5% silica on
refractories and were 4.3 microns in diameter. The fibre blanket was compressed to
30.5% volume fraction at 40 kPa, without damage to the fibres.
[0080] The above gel fibres, of diameter 5 microns were treated as follows in a tube furnace.
The temperature was raised to 150°C in 40 mins while the furnace was purged with air.
The air was then replaced by steam and the temperature raised to 500°C in 2 hours.
The steam was then replaced by air and the temperature raised to 950° in 1.5-2 hours.
The properties of the product are given below:-

Example 8
[0081] A solution without refractory stabiliser was prepared as follows. 0.1 gm of thiourea
was dissolved in 600 gm of aluminium chlorhydrate solution (Locron L from Hoechst
AG), and 16.5 gm of polyethylene glycol (PEG 10000) was added. A spinning aid, polyethylene
oxide (WSR-N-750), was dissolved over 3 hours with the help of a propeller stirrer.
Stirring was continued and the solution was completed by adding 160 gm of aluminium
chlorhydrate flake gradually over l5 minutes and stirring for a further 2 hours. The
viscosity was 14.1 poise and after filtering through a GF/B filter under 50 psig pressure,
the solution was spun as in Example 6 to give an aligned fibre blanket. The fibre
diameter was 5 micron and the compression characteristics of the product were similar
to those of Example 6.
[0082] The above
gel fibres, of diameter 5 micron, were treated as follows in a tube furnace. The temperature
was raised to 150°C in 40 mins while the furnace was purged with air. The air was
then replaced by steam and the temperature raised to 500°C in 2 hours. The steam was
then replaced by air and the temperature raised to 950°C in 1.5-2 hours. The properties,
of the product are given below:-
[0083]

Example 9
[0084] A precursor solution to yttria-stabilised zirconia fibres was prepared as follows:-67.7
gm of glacial acetic acid, 16.4 gm of 36.5% w/w concentrated hydrochloric acid and
0.025 gm of thiourea were mixed together with a PVC-coated propeller stirrer.
[0085] Basic zirconium carbonate paste containing 38% w/w zirconia was procured from magnesium
Electron Ltd. 287.5 gm of the paste were used in the preparation of the solution.
The first 200 gm was added to the stirred mixed acids in 25 gm aliquots over a period
of 45 minutes, the separate additions being made every 5 minutes. 25 gm of yttrium
chloride hexahydrate were added over 5 minutes and stirred in for a further 40 minutes.
The remaining zirconium carbonate paste was then added in quantities of 12.5 gm every
five minutes. The solution viscosity was 8 poise at this stage.
[0086] The solution was pressurised with air at 50 psi and filtered through a Whatman GF/B
glass fibre filter, care being taken to recover all the liquid.
[0087] 3.9 gm of polyethylene oxide (Union Carbide WSR-N-750) were then dissolved in the
solution by stirring with the same propeller for 2 hours. The viscosity, measured
with an Ubbelhode suspended level viscometer, was 68.4 poise at 25*C, and was reduced
to 25.8 poise by blending in 13 ml of water.
[0088] A clear spinning solution was obtained by filtering through a Whatman GF/B filter.
[0089] The solution was extruded at a rate of 1.5 ml/hr per hole through a row of holes
on either side of which were slits directed to converge on the emerging extrudate.
Streams of humidified air passed through the slits at a flow rate of 60 m/sec and
relative humidity 84% at 27°C. Dry air, heated to 63°C, flowed outside the humid air
streams.
[0090] Long, nominally continuous gel fibres were formed, and these were fed with the air
streams into a converging duct. Air left the base of the duct at 14 m/sec and air
and fibres impinged on a wind-up drum coated with fine Carborundun paper rotating
at 10 m/sec peripheral velocity. A blanket of essentially aligned fibres accumulated
on the drum.
[0091] After 15 minutes the drum was withdrawn from the base of the duct, stopped and the
aligned blanket removed. At this stage the gel fibres contained 54% by weight of refractory
material with yttria 7.6% by weight of the refractories. The median diameter was 4.6
micron.
[0092] A circular disc of area 10 cm
2 was cut from the gel fibre blanket and loaded up to 40000 Pa on a Shirley Thickness
Gauge. The gel fibre compressed to 27% v/v without damage when subjected to this load.
[0093] 10.5 g of gel fibres were placed in a tube furnace and were heated in an air stream
at 5°C/minute to 900°C over 2.75 hours.
[0094] The fibres had a median diameter of 3.1 micron, an apparent density of 4.0 g/ml,
a porosity of 28%, a surface area of 18 m
2/g and were found to be tetragonal Zr0
2 by X-Ray diffraction. After compression at 100 kPa their volume fraction was 42%
and on release of the pressure the fibres were found to be undamaged.
Example 10
[0095] The spinning experiment of Example 9 was continued at an extrusion rate of 3 ml/hr
per hole, other spinning parameters remaining constant. Fibres of 7.7 micron mean
diameter with individual diameters ranging from 4 to 12.5 micron were produced. The
spinning was stopped after 10 minutes and an aligned tow of fully stabilised zirconia
precursor fibres was removed from the drum.
[0096] 5g of the gel fibre was put into a tube furnace and heated to 200°C in 1 hour while
purging with 4 litres/min air. After 30 mins at 200°C the air purge was reduced to
3 litres/min and 2 litres/min superheated steam was introduced (calculated at room
temperature and pressure). The temperature was then raised to 500°C in 100 mins and
held at 500°C for 20 mins after the steam supply was shut off and the air flow raised
to 4 litres/min. The temperature was then raised to 900°C during 80 mins and held
at that temperature for 20 mins before cooling.
[0097] The fibres were found to have the following properties:

Example 11
[0098] Zirconium carbonate paste was digested in mixed acetic and hydrochloric acids as
described in Example 9; identical quantities of acids, thiourea and paste were used,
but only half the quantity of yttrium chloride hexahydrate (12.5 gm) was added.
[0099] The commercial paste contained 0.5% sulphate on zirconia and this was removed from
the solution when digestion of the paste was completed, at which stage the solution
viscosity was 6 poise. 1.53 gm of barium chloride dihydrate were dissolved in 10 ml
of water and stirred with the solution for 1 hour. 336.5 gm were recovered after filtering
through GF/B filters at 50 psig pressure. 3.4 gm of polyethylene oxide (Polyox WSR-N-750)
were then added and dissolved by stirring with the propeller stirrer for 2 hours.
[0100] The solution was left overnight and a precipitate reformed, whereupon it was refiltered
through GF/B filters to produce a stable clear spinning solution of viscosity 21 poise
(measured at 25°C).
[0101] As in Example 9, the solution was extruded through a row of fine holes on either
side of which impinged converging air slits carrying streams of humidified air flowing
at 60 m/sec. The air temperature was 26°C and relative humidity 93%. Streams of dry
air at 63°C, flowed outside the humid air streams. The extrusion rate was 1.1 ml per
hour per hole. The mixed air streams were directed into a converging duct from which
they emerged to impinge on a drum rotating at 10 m/sec peripheral velocity.
[0102] Fine, essentially-continuous fibres were formed in the duct and accumulated as an
aligned blanket on the drum. After 10 minutes the drum was withdrawn from the duct
and stopped, and the thin blanket of aligned fibres was cut parallel to the rotor
axis and removed.
[0103] The precursor to partially stabilized zirconia fibres comprised 55% refractory material,
was sulphate- free, and contained 3.6% yttria on refractories. The fibres were 4.6
micron mean diameter with a range from 2.5 to 9 micron. They were compressed to a
volume fraction of 32% when subjected to 40 kPa pressure in a Shirley thickness gauge.
[0104] 5 gm of the gel fibre was put into a tube furnace and heated to 200°C in 1 hour while
purging with 4 litres/min air. After 30 min at 200°C the air purge was reduced to
3 litres/min and 2 litres/min superheated steam was introduced (calculated at room
temperature and pressure). The temperature was then raised to 500°C in 100 min and
held at 500°C for 20 mins after which the . steam supply was shut off and the air
flow raised to 4 litres/min. The temperature then was raised to 900°C during 80 mins
and held at that temperature for 20 mins before cooling.
[0105] The fibres were found to have the following properties:

Examples 12 and 13
[0106] A spinning solution was prepared from the following components:-
[0107]

The blending procedures followed those of Example 4, ending with a solution viscosity
of 12.8 poise.
[0108] Example 12 - The solution was spun at an extrusion rate of 1.8 ml/hole/hr to give
an aligned blanket of essentially continuous fibres of mean diameter 5 micron. The
gel fibres contained 10% silica on refractories.
[0109] Example 13 - A further sample of the solution was extruded at a rage of 2.9 ml/hr/hole
under the same spinning conditions to produce a blanket of aligned essentially continuous
fibres of diameters ranging from 12 to 16 microns.
[0110] Approximately 17 g of each of the gel fibres from Examples 12 and 13 was placed in
a tube furnace and heated in an air stream to 150°C during 50 mins. The air was then
replaced by superheated steam and the temperature raised to 500°C over 2 hours. The
steam was shut off and the air flow restored, the temperature then being increased
to 950°C over 100 mins before cooling.
[0111] The properties of the fibres are given in the Table.

Example 14
[0112] 1.25 1 sodium aluminate (containing 20% w/w A1
20
3) stock solution was diluted to 2 1 with distilled water. Separately a solution of
20% nitric acid was prepared by adding 1.429 1 distilled water to 0.571 1 of concentrated
nitric acid (70%).
[0113] Aluminium hydroxide gel was continuously precipitated by pumping both solutions (peristaltic
pumps; 30 ml/min) into a small (250 ml) well-stirred water-cooled vessel fitted with
an overflow and a glass pH electrode set. The output of the pH meter was used to control
the peristaltic pump feeding the nitric acid. The precipitation temperature was maintained
below 25°C by cooling and the pH set-point was 7.0 though the actual value oscillated
between 6.3 and 7.8. The precipitation was terminated when pH control was lost. The
gel slurry overflowed into a Buchner filter and collected over 1 hr as a thick cake.
The cake was washed with 6 1 of demineralised water to remove sodium ions. After washing
the gel was rapidly analysed and found to contain 5.6% w/w NO
3, 0.08% Na+ and 17.2% A1
20
3. Within 1 hour of washing, the gel (874.7g) was slurried with 53.8 ml 70% nitric
acid and heated under reflux for 1 hour. A cloudy solution was formed which after
cooling had a pH of 3.93 and a density of 1.24 g/ml. This solution had an Al/N0
3 mole ratio of 1.78.
[0114] The solution was concentrated by distillation till it reached a strength of 27% (A1
20
3), cooled to room temperature and 3.6 g of N 750 Polyox and 0.036 g thiourea were
dissolved with stirring. 29 g of DC 193 siloxane were blended into this solution (500
g) and 5 ml water added. After filtration through three Gelman polypropylene filters
the viscosity was 5 poise at 25°C.
[0115] The solution was extruded through a row of fine holes at a rate of 2.2 ml/hr per
hole. The spinning arrangement was as in Example 9 with humid air at 26°C and 80%
relative humidity and dry air at 68°C. The fibre blanket was collected on a drum coated
with fine emery paper running at 10 m/sec, and the air left the duct at 14 m/sec.
[0116] 3.3 g of the resulting gel fibre was placed in a tube furnace and heated in an air
stream at 3°C/minute temperature rise rate to 200°C. At 140°C copious nitrous fumes
were evolved. After holding at 200°C for 30 min the air purge was replaced by a steam
flow and the temperature raised over 1.5 hours to 500°C. The air flow was restored
and the steam was cut off and after 20 min the temperature was raised to 900°C during
1 hr. After 20 min at 900°C the sample was cooled.
[0117] The fibres were found to have a diameter of 4.2 micron, porosity 31%, surface area
41 m
2/g, and an apparent density of 1.96 g/ml. After compression at 750 kPa, the volume
fraction of fibres was 33.2% and on release of pressure the fibres were undamaged.
Examples 15 TO 20
[0118] Gel fibres of 5 micron mean diameter were prepared as in Example 21. Samples of these
gel fibres were fired in various ways using a tube furnace as shown in Table 3. In
the case of Example 16, the liquid extrusion rate was 0.7 ml/hole/hr. In the case
of Example 17 the fibres were exposed to ammonia gas at room temperature for 30 mins
(weight increase 6.5%) before heat treatment.

Example 21
[0119] A large batch of spinning solution was prepared from the following ingredients:-
[0120]

[0121] The solution was compounded and blended according to the procedure described in Example
4. After blending, the viscosity of the solution was 22 poise, and the solution was
filtered through a Balston B type filter nominally rated at 2.5 microns.
[0122] The solution was extruded through a row of fine holes on to which converged slits
feeding jets of humidified air at 23°C and 82% relative humidity, flowing at 55 m/sec.
Warm dry air at 45°C flowed outside the humidified air and the air streams were fed
into a converging rectangular duct. The extrusion rate was 0.8 ml/hole/hour. Fine,
straight, essentially-continuous fibres were produced.
[0123] Air left the duct at 17 m/sec and the fibres were directed on to a finely perforated
stainless steel drum, rotating at 12.5 m/sec with a suction of 2 kPa applied to the
interior. The drum was stopped after 45 minutes and the suction withdrawn. A blanket
of aligned precursor fibres had accumulated on the drum and was found to be 5.6 micron
median diameter with a spread from 3 to 9 micron. A sample of the blanket was compressed
to 42% volume fraction of fibres on application of a pressure of 40 kPa.
[0124] A sample of the precursor fibres was heated following the regime described in Example
4. The product, on cooling, could be compressed to over 50% volume fraction without
breakage of the fibres. Compression characteristics are shown in the table.

[0125] The blanket recovered to 28.4% on releasing the pressure; essentially no breakage
of fibres occurred at 51% volume fraction fibres.
Example 22
[0126] An essentially-aligned fibre blanket was produced with the solution and equipment
outlined in Example 21, and fibre accumulated on the perforated drum until the area
density had reached 0.5 kg/m
2. The drum was stopped with suction still applied. The drum was then restarted at
a low speed of 2 m/sec and the fibre blanket traversed with a carbon reinforced nylon
wheel cutter which cut the blanket into a spiral of 0.5 cm pitch, this being less
than l% of the drum circumference.
[0127] When cutting was completed the drum and suction were stopped and the spiral end taken
up in a 5 cm diameter air mover. The drum was restarted at low speed and the spiral
tow of fibres discharged, through the air mover, into a collecting bin.
[0128] The tow was then wound into a circular skein about 30 cm in diameter and the skein
tied lightly with loops of refractory tow, already made, at 4 points separated by
90 degrees.
[0129] The skein was fired following the procedure described in Example 4 and the cooled
tow of aligned porous fibre was wound on to a bobbin.
[0130] The tow was fed through a braiding machine and overwound with eight strands of 167
DECITEX viscose threads. Tows could be braided together and 1.5 Km of refractory yarn
were accumulated in this way. The yarn was woven into a tape of width approx 7.5 cm
and length 10 m. on an industrial tape weaving machine, and subsequently fired to
1300°C to burn off the viscose and sinter the alumina.
1. A fibre product comprising inorganic oxide fibres of mean diameter less than 10
microns which can be compressed to increase the volume fraction of fibres therein
to greater than 0.25 without undue breakage of the fibres as denoted by a fall to
below 50% in the specific tensile strength of the product.
2. A fibre product as claimed in Claim 1 which can be compressed to increase the volume
fraction of fibres therein to 0.5 or greater without undue breakage of the fibres.
3. A fibre product as claimed in Claim 1 or Claim 2 wherein the mean diameter of the
fibres is less than 5 microns.
4. A fibre product as claimed in any one of Claims 1 to 3 wherein the fibres are essentially
aligned such that at least 90% of the fibres are essentially parallel.
5. A fibre product as claimed in any one of the preceding claims wherein the fibres
are nominally-continuous fibres.
6. A fibre product as claimed in Claim 5 wherein the proportion of interrupted fibres
in a square cm of the product is no greater than 1 in 100.
7. A fibre product as clained in Claim 5 or Claim 6 having a tensile strength of at
least 25,000 Pa in a direction perpendicular to the general direction of alignment
of the fibres.
8. A fibre product as claimed in any one of the preceding claims in the form of a
mat or blanket.
9. A fibre product as claimed in any one of Claims 1 to 7 in the form of a tape.
10. A fibre product as claimed in any one of Claims 1 to 7 or 9 in the form of a woven
material.
11. A fibre product as claimed in any one of Claims 1 to 9 comprising essentially-aligned
fibres and having a Specular Reflectance of at least 10 units in the general direction
of alignment of the fibres.
12. A fibre product as claimed in Claim 11 wherein the Specular Reflectance is at
least 20 units.
13. A fibre product as claimed in any one of the preceding claims comprising alumina
fibres.
14. A fibre product as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims wherein the fibres
comprise a transition phase of the inorganic oxide and contain a phase stabiliser.
15. A fibre product as claimed in Claim 14 wherein the inorganic oxide is alumina
and the phase stabiliser is silica.
16. A fibre product as claimed in Claim 13 or 15 wherein the apparent density of the
fibres is from 1.75 to 3.3 g/ml.
17. A method for the manufacture of a fibre product as claimed in any one of Claims
1 to 16 which comprises forming a spinning formulation into a multiplicity of fibre
precursor streams, entraining the freshly-spun fibre precursor streams in air streams,
passing the fibre precursors entrained in air streams through a converging duct, collecting
the fibre precursors on a wind-up drum and subsequently converting the fibre precursors
into inorganic oxide fibres.
18. A method as claimed in Claim 17 wherein the spinning formulation is formed into
fibre precursor streams by extrusion through orifices into converging streams of air
of relative humidity greater than 70%.
19. A method as claimed in Claim 17 or Claim 18 wherein the fibre precursors are converted
into inorganic oxide fibres by heating.
20. A method as claimed in Claim 19 wherein the fibre precursors are heated in steam
at a temperature up to 600°C and subsequently are heated at a higher temperature up
to about 1100°C.
21. A method as claimed in any one of Claims 17 to 20 wherein before or after heating
to convert the fibre precursors into inorganic oxide fibres, the product collected
on the wind-up drum is cut and removed in the form of one or more tapes.
22. A method as claimed in any one of Claims 17 to 21 which includes the further step
of weaving the product collected on the wind-up drum into a woven material.
23. A method as claimed in Claim 22 wherein prior to weaving yarns or tapes of the
product collected on the wind-up drum are overlaid with an organic carrier fibre.